Firefighting crews pour water onto a unit after a fire at a Chevron refinery. The fire sent plumes of black smoke over the San Francisco Bay Area. AP

SAN FRANCISCO 
A massive Chevron oil refinery fire that sent hundreds of people rushing to hospitals and is pushing West Coast gas prices higher was just the latest pollution incident at the facility that records show has increasingly violated air quality rules over the past five years.

The refinery is one of three such facilities near San Francisco that rank among the state’s top 10 emitters of toxic chemicals, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Toxic Release Inventory.

Chevron’s Richmond refinery — the scene of Monday’s fire that shrouded the area in black smoke — has been cited by San Francisco Bay Area regulators for violating air regulations 93 times in the past five years.

The number has increased from 15 violations in 2007 to 23 in both 2010 and 2011. The refinery is also the state’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases, according to state regulators.

The Richmond refinery produces about 150,000 barrels of gasoline a day — 16 percent of the West Coast’s daily gasoline consumption of 963,000 barrels, said Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at Oil Price Information Service.

With inventories of gasoline in the region already low compared with the rest of the country, pump prices on the West Coast will soon average more than $4 a gallon, Kloza said.

This week’s disruption in production quickly sent the price of a gallon of regular gasoline in California up 3 cents, said analyst Patrick DeHaan of the website
GasBuddy.com.

Investigations continued Wednesday into Chevron’s response to the fire and the effectiveness of Contra Costa County’s emergency warning system. The U.S. Chemical Safety Board, a federal agency, sent a seven-member team to look into possible exposure of workers after vapor ignited and caused the fire.

Monday wasn’t the first time Richmond residents had received shelter-in-place orders to stay in their homes and close the doors and windows after fires or accidents at nearby refineries.

They were anxious about the latest fire, and reports of a minor, secondary fire at the refinery on Wednesday magnified concerns.

“Events like this most recent fire are a trigger for a long-standing mistrust of Chevron,” said Jason Corburn, a professor of public health and urban planning at University of California Berkeley. “People feel these spikes in air pollutants, and feel these dangerous events in the context of the daily (air quality issues) that don’t show up on county air monitors.”

The Richmond facility isn’t the biggest violator of air quality laws among the region’s five oil refineries, but it’s been cited for violating air regulations numerous times. Some of the violations remain under investigation for determination of penalties.

Chevron spokeswoman Melissa Ritchie said in an email that the refinery “places the highest priority on the health and safety of our work force, our neighbors and the protection of the environment.”

“We know our ability to do so is dependent on a proven capability to operate safely and in an environmentally sound way,” she wrote.

Some of the San Francisco Bay Area’s other refineries have more violations than Chevron. The most involved a Valero-owned refinery in nearby Benicia, which has 222 violations over the same five-year period.